In this blog you can find world of incredible nature, neon green river, snow photos from nat geo, bizarre creatures under the see, wonderful houses made out of recycled materials, precious natural stones and more. This blog always will be renewed.

Global warming
threatens glaciers. In the news time from time slips that one or another
icy river is endangered. So the best way is to hurry in order to make
sure that the photos do not lie, and the ice really is all shades of
blue and pink colors, and not white, as it appears to those who saw it
only in the form of icicles, hanging from the roofs of houses.

Here I have compiled some of the most beautiful glaciers around the globe. I hope you will like it.

Biafo Glacier, Pakistan

Biafo glacier
takes us to a journey to the edge of the ice plains and to the Snow
Lake. You will not stop appreciating its grandeur of the surrounding
flora and fauna.

This is one
extreme list. It has it all Hottest coldest even wettest. Imagine living
in a place so remote the mail only comes once a year. Or reaching the
summit of the highest place on earth…which isn’t Mt.Everest….. Surprised. Go Read on to learn about some of the most extreme places on the planet.

Here I have compiled some of the most extreme places on earth. I hope you will like it.

Perhaps Sir Edmund Hillary the New
Zealand mountaineer and explorer said it best when he remarked, “It is
not the mountain we conquer but ourselves.” No matter how daunting the
task, pure human ambition has overcome unconquerable odds to subdue the
tallest peaks in the world. If mountains are the “stairway to god’s
heart”, we have no doubt stood beside him as equals.

Here I have compiled some of the most beautiful mountain peaks of the world. I hope you will like it.

Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, one of the main attractions on
America's outpost in the Pacific, was closed earlier this week due to an
eruption of sulfur gas fumes from Mount Kilauea.Photo: Image from Cat Butler on Flickr
Some 2,000 people were evacuated from the scene on Tuesday, and the park remains closed.
Volcanic Fog (Vog, for short) forms when the sulfur dioxide reacts
with oxygen, sunlight, dust particles, and the like, to form a highly
toxic mix that hangs suspended in the air. It also typically includes
such dangerous substances as sulfuric acid. When it's not melting your
face, it can cause severe breathing problems especially among those who
suffer from asthma, bronchitis, and emphysema.
The dangerous gas has so far forced 6 people into Red Cross shelters,
and another 42 into hotels; the park officials are persisting in their
hope that the trade winds will resume on Thursday and clear the islands,
but are cautioning against any such hope in the citizenry, because,
well, that's what officials do in times of natural crisis.

Photo: Image: *christopher*
Written by new contributor, Andy Stone
Problems were inevitable for Antarctic tourism from the start. Seen
by many as the last unspoiled landmass on earth, the unique and
vulnerable ecosystem is what attracts people to our southernmost
continent. How do we handle tourism to a place whose only appeal to
most of us is its lack of large-scale human contact? Doesn't that
defeat the purpose?